Look at great photos of HMS Victory at Portsmouth
HMS Victory is
a 100-gun
ship of the line of the
Royal Navy, built in the
1760s
and currently a
museum
in
dry dock in
Portsmouth. She is the oldest ship still in commission.
Her keel was laid down in
Chatham on
23
July
1759, and she was
launched on
7 May
1765.
She weathered at the dock for 13 years until she was
commissioned in
1778
under the command of Rear Admiral
John Campbell (1st Captain) and Captain
Jonathan Faulknor (2nd Captain), with the flag of Admiral the
Honorable
Augustus Keppel. She was armed with smooth-bore,
cast iron
cannon
- 30 x 32- and 42-pounders (15 and 19kg), 30 x 24-pounders (11kg),
and 40 x 12-pounders (5kg). Later she also carried two
carronades, firing 68lb (31kg) round shot.
Keppel put to sea from
Spithead on
July 9,
1778,
with a force of 30
ships of the line and, on
July
23rd, sighted a
French
fleet of 29 sail 100 miles (160km) west of
Ushant.
The French Admiral, the
Comte d'Orvilliers, who had orders to avoid battle, was cut off
from
Brest but retained the
weather gage. Two of his ships to windward escaped into port
leaving him with 27. The two fleets manoeuvred during shifting
winds and a heavy rain squall until a battle became inevitable with
the British more or less in column and the French in some confusion.
However, the French managed to pass along the British line to
windward with their most advanced ships. At about a quarter to
twelve Victory opened fire on
Bretagne 110, followed by
Ville de Paris 90. The British van escaped with little loss
but Sir
Hugh Palliser's rear division suffered considerably. Keppel made
the signal to wear and follow the French but Palliser did not
conform and the action was not resumed. Keppel was court-martialled
and cleared and Palliser criticised by an enqiry before the affair
turned into a party political squabble.
On
December 2,
1781,
Victory, now commanded by Captain
Henry Cromwell and bearing the flag of Rear Admiral
Richard Kempenfelt, sailed with 11 other ships of the line, a 50
and five frigates, to intercept a convoy which sailed from Brest on
December 10. Ignorant of the fact that the French
Comte de Guichen had twenty-one ships of the line, Kempenfelt
ordered a chase when they were sighted on
December 12 and began the
Second Battle of Ushant. When he noted the French superiority he
contented himself with capturing 15 sail of the convoy. The French
were dispersed in a gale and forced to return home.
In
1796
Captain
Robert Calder (First Captain) and Captain
George Grey (Second Captain) commanded Victory under
Admiral Sir
John Jervis's flag. Sir John sailed from the
Tagus
on
January 18,
1797,
and after being reinforced on
February 6 by five ships from England, his fleet consisted of 15
sail of the line and six frigates. On
February 14, the
Portuguese frigate Carlotta, commanded by a Scotsman
named Campbell with a Portuguese commission, brought news that a
Spanish fleet was close. Jervis manoeuvred to intercept, and the
Battle of Cape St Vincent was joined.
Principe de Asturias, leading the Spanish lee division,
tried to break through the British line ahead or astern of
Victory but that ship poured such a tremendous fire into her,
followed by several raking broadsides, that the whole Spanish
division wore round and bore up.
Horatio Nelson, in
HMS Captain (primarily), also played a decisive role in
this action.
In February
1798,
Victory was stationed as a prison ship at
Chatham under the command of Lieutenant J. Rickman. In
1799,
Rickeman was relieved by Lieutenant J. Busbridge. In
1801,
Victory was rebuilt.
Lord Nelson hoisted his flag in Victory in
May
1803
with
Samuel Sutton as his
flag captain. His Lordship sailed to assume command in the
Mediterranean on
May 20
but removed into the
frigate
Amphion. On
May
28th Captain Sutton captured the French
Embuscade 32, bound for
Rochefort from
San Domingo. Victory rejoined Lord Nelson off
Toulon
on
July 30 when Captain Sutton exchanged with Captain
Thomas Hardy into Amphion.
Victory was passing
the island of
Toro on
April
4,
1805,
when
Phoebe brought the news that the French fleet under
Pierre-Charles Villeneuve had escaped from
Toulon.
While Nelson made for
Sicily
to see if the French were heading for
Egypt,
Villeneuve was entering
Cádiz
to link up with the Spanish fleet. On
May 7
Nelson reached
Gibraltar and received his first definite news. The British
fleet completed their stores in
Lagos Bay, Portugal, on
May 10
and two days later sailed westward with ten ships and three frigates
in pursuit of the combined Franco-Spanish fleet of 17 ships. They
arrived in the
West Indies to find that the enemy was sailing back to Europe
where
Napoleon Bonaparte was waiting for them with his invasion forces
at
Boulogne.
The combined fleet were involved in an indecisive
action in fog off
Ferrol
with Admiral Sir
Robert Calder's squadron on
July
22 before taking refuge in
Vigo
and Ferrol to land wounded and abandon three damaged ships. Calder
on
August 14 and Nelson on
August 15 joined Admiral Cornwallis's Channel Fleet off Ushant.
Nelson continued to England in Victory leaving his
Mediterranean fleet with Cornwallis who detached 20 of his 33 ships
of the line and sent them under Calder to find the combined fleet at
Ferrol. On
August 19 came the worrying news that the enemy had sailed from
there, followed by relief when they arrived in Cádiz two days later.
On the evening of Saturday,
September 28, Lord Nelson joined Lord Collingwood's fleet off
Cádiz, quietly, so that his presence would not be known.
When Admiral Villeneuve learned that he was to be
removed from command he took his ships to sea on the morning of
October 19, first sailing south towards the Mediterranean but
then turning north towards the British fleet, beginning the
Battle of Trafalgar. Nelson had already made his plans: to break
the enemy line some two or three ships ahead of their Commander in
Chief in the centre and achieve victory before the van could come to
their aid. In the event fitful winds made it a slow business. For
five hours after Nelson's last manoeuvering signal the two columns
of British ships slowly approached the French line before
Royal Sovereign, leading the lee column, was able to open
fire on
Fougueux. Twenty-five minutes later Victory broke the
line between
Bucentaure and
Redoubtable firing a double-shotted broadside into the stern
of the former from a range of a few yards. At 25 minutes past one
Nelson was shot, the fatal ball entering his left shoulder and
lodging in his spine. He died at half past four. Such killing had
taken place on Victory's quarter-deck that Redoubtable
attempted to board her, but the marines and small arms men repelled
them. Nelson's last order was for the fleet to anchor but this was
rejected by Vice Admiral Collingwood. Victory lost 57 killed
and 102 wounded.
Victory took Nelson's
body to
England where, after lying in state at
Greenwich, the burial took place in
St. Paul's Cathedral on
January 6,
1806.
Victory bore many
Admiral's flags after Trafalgar, and sailed on numerous expeditions,
including two Baltic campaigns under Admiral Sir
James Saumarez. Her active career ended on
November 7,
1812,
when she was moored in
Portsmouth Harbour off
Gosport.
Over the next century, Victory slowly
deteriorated at her moorings. A campaign to save her started in
1921
and in
1922
the fragile hull was moved into the oldest drydock in the world: No.
2 dock at Portsmouth. Restoration continued and in
1928
King George V was able to unveil a tablet celebrating the
completion of the work, which still continues.
HMS Victory is still in commission as the
flagship of the
Second Sea Lord in his role as admiral in command of the
Royal Navy's Home Command.
The name is also used to refer to the Royal Naval
Barracks at
Portsmouth.
Originally from
http://www.cronab.demon.co.uk/V.HTM, with the author's
permission.
Admirals who have hoisted flags in
Victory
| Admiral The Hon.
Augustus Keppel |
May 16,
1778 |
October 28,
1778 |
| Admiral Sir
Charles Hardy |
March 19,
1779 |
May 14,
1780 |
| Admiral Geary |
May 24,
1780 |
August 28,
1780 |
| Rear Admiral
Francis Drake |
September 26,
1780 |
December 29,
1780 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
Hyde Parker |
March 20,
1781 |
May 31,
1781 |
| Commodore
John Elliot |
June
1781 |
August
1781 |
| Rear Admiral
Richard Kempenfelt |
September 10,
1781 |
March 11,
1782 |
|
Admiral The Earl Howe |
April 20,
1782 |
November 14,
1782 |
|
Admiral The Earl Howe |
July
1790 |
August
1790 |
|
Admiral The Lord Hood |
August
1790 |
August
1791 |
| Rear Admiral Sir
Hyde Parker |
February 6,
1793 |
May
1793 |
|
Admiral The Lord Hood |
May 6,
1793 |
December 15,
1794 |
| Rear Admiral
John Man |
July 8,
1795 |
September 27,
1795 |
| Vice Admiral
Robert Linzee |
October
1795 |
November
1795 |
| Admiral Sir
John Jervis |
December 3,
1795 |
March 30,
1797 |
| Vice Admiral The Viscount
Nelson |
May 8,
1803 |
October 21,
1805 |
| Admiral Sir
James Saumarez |
March 18,
1808 |
December 9,
1808 |
| Admiral Sir
Graham Moore |
December
1808 |
January 23,
1809 |
| Admiral Sir James Saumarez |
April 8,
1809 |
December
1809 |
| Admiral Sir James Saumarez |
March 11,
1810 |
December 3,
1810 |
| Rear Admiral Sir
Joseph Yorke |
December
1810 |
March
1811 |
| Admiral Sir James Saumarez |
April 2,
1811 |
December 25,
1811, |
| Admiral Sir James Saumarez |
April 14,
1812 |
October 15,
1812 |
| In Ordinary |
December 18,
1812 |
January 31,
1824 |
| Commissioner Sir
Michael Seymour |
1824 |
| Paid off |
April 30,
1827 |
October 21,
1831 |
| became Flagship of Port Admiral |
| Rear Admiral Sir
F L Maitland |
1832 |
| Rear Admiral
D Pleydell Bouverie |
1837 |
| Rear Admiral
Hyde Parker |
1842 |
| Rear Admiral
W H Shiffeff |
1847 |
| Admiral Sir
C. Ogle |
March 20,
1848 |
December 19,
1848 |
| Admiral Sir
T B. Capel |
December 20,
1848 |
December 19,
1851 |
| Admiral Sir
Thomas Briggs |
December 20,
1851 |
March 19,
1853 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
Thomas J. Cochrane |
March 20,
1854 |
March 19,
1856 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
George F. Seymour |
March 20,
1856 |
March 19,
1859 |
| Admiral
William Bowles |
March 20,
1859 |
March 19,
1860 |
| Vice Admiral
Henry Bruce |
March 20,
1860 |
December 19,
1864 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
Michael Seymour |
December 20,
1864 |
March 19,
1866 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
Thomas Pasley |
March 20,
1866 |
March 20,
1869 |
|
Tender to
HMS Duke of Wellington |
December 20,
1869 |
September 1,
1891 |
|
Admiral The Earl of Clanwilliam |
August 1,
1891 |
September 17,
1894 |
| Admiral Sir
Nowell Salmon VC |
September 18,
1894 |
August 31,
1897 |
| Admiral Sir
Michael Culme-Seymour |
September 1,
1897 |
November 17,
1900 |
| Admiral Sir
Charles F Hotham |
November 18,
1900 |
September 30,
1903 |
| Admiral Sir
John A. Fisher |
October 1,
1903 |
March 18,
1904 |
| The Port Admiral's flag moved to
Hercules
and on
February 1,
1905,
to
Firequeen |
| Admiral Sir
Archibald L Douglas |
March 18,
1905 |
March 1,
1907 |
| Admiral Sir
Day H Bosanquet |
March 2,
1907 |
March 17,
1908 |
| Admiral Sir
Arthur D. Fanshawe |
March 18,
1908 |
April 30,
1910 |
| Admiral Sir
Assheton Gore Gurzon-Howe |
May 1,
1910 |
March 17,
1911 |
| Admiral Sir
Arthur W. Moore |
March 18,
1911 |
July 31,
1912 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
Hedworth Meux |
August 1,
1912 |
February 17,
1916 |
| Admiral The Hon Sir
Stanley Colvill |
February 18,
1916 |
April 17,
1919 |
| Admiral Sir
Cecil Burney |
April 18,
1919 |
June 17,
1920 |
| Admiral Hon Sir
Arthur Gough-Calthorpe |
June 18,
1920 |
May 31,
1923 |
| Admiral Sir
Sidney Robert Fremantle |
June 1,
1923 |
April 1,
1926 |
| Admiral Sir
Osmond de Beauvior Brock |
May 18,
1926 |
April 30,
1929 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
Roger Keyes |
May 1,
1929 |
June 17,
1931 |
| Admiral Sir
Arthur Waistell |
June 18,
1931 |
February 17,
1934 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
John Kelly |
February 18,
1931 |
August 31,
1936 |
|
Admiral of the Fleet The Earl of Cork and Orrery |
August 18,
1937 |
June 30,
1939 |
| Admiral Sir
William M. James |
July 1,
1939 |
September 30,
1942 |
| Admiral Sir
Charles Little |
October 1,
1942 |
September 28,
1945 |
| Admiral Sir
Geoffrey Layton |
September 29,
1945 |
June 29,
1947 |
|
Admiral The Lord Fraser of North Cape |
June 30,
1947 |
April 18,
1949 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
Algernon Willis |
April 19,
1949 |
October 17,
1950 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
Arthur J. Power |
October 18,
1950 |
October 17,
1952 |
| Admiral Sir
John Edelsten |
October 18,
1952 |
October 17,
1954 |
| Admiral of the Fleet Sir
George E Creasy |
October 18,
1954 |
July 17,
1957 |
| Admiral Sir
Guy Grantham |
July 18,
1957 |
July 17,
1959 |
| Admiral Sir
Manley L Power |
July 18,
1959 |
January 17,
1962 |
| Admiral Sir
Alexander N C Bingley |
January 18,
1962 |
January 17,
1963 |
| Admiral Sir
Wilfrid J. W. Woods |
January 18,
1963 |
September 9,
1965 |
| Admiral Sir
Varyl C. Begg |
September 10,
1965 |
June 9,
1966 |
| Admiral Sir
Frank E. Hopkins |
June 10,
1966 |
October 30,
1967 |
| Admiral Sir
John B. Frewen |
October 31,
1967 |
February 27,
1970 |
| Admiral Sir
Horace R. Law |
February 28,
1970 |
February 28,
1972 |
| Admiral Sir
Andrew Lewis |
February 29,
1972 |
June 29,
1974 |
| Admiral Sir
Derek Empson |
June 30,
1974 |
October 30,
1975 |
| Admiral Sir
Terence Lewin |
October 31,
1975 |
October 30,
1976 |
| Admiral Sir
David Williams |
October 31,
1976 |
October 30,
1978 |
| Admiral Sir
Richard Clayton |
October 31,
1978 |
June 30,
1981 |
| Admiral Sir
James Eberle |
July 1,
1981 |
December 31,
1983 |
| Admiral Sir
Desmond Cassidi |
January 1,
1983 |
October 30,
1984 |
| Admiral Sir
Peter Stanford |
October 31,
1984 |
October 30,
1987 |
| Admiral Sir
John Woodward |
October 31,
1987 |
October 30,
1989 |
| Admiral Sir
Jeremy Black |
October 31,
1989 |
March 30,
1991 |
| Admiral Sir
John Kerr |
March 31,
1991 |
March 30,
1993 |
| Admiral Sir
Michael Layard |
March 31,
1993 |
March 30,
1994 |
| Admiral Sir
Michael Boyce |
March 31,
1994 |
March 30,
1997 |
| Admiral Sir
John Brigstocke |
March 31,
1997 |
January 18,
2000 |
| Vice Admiral Sir
Peter Spencer |
January 19,
2000 |
January 28,
2003 |
| Vice-Admiral
James Burnell-Nugent |
29 January
2003 |
present |
|